The Pharaohs triumphed 4-2 on penalties after a 1-1 deadlock in Dallas, ending Asia’s campaign at the tournament.
DALLAS, July 4, 2026 – Egypt secured a historic milestone in international football by advancing to the Round of 16 at the FIFA World Cup for the first time in their history, overcoming Australia 4-2 in a tense penalty shootout after the match ended 1-1 following extra time.
Mohamed Salah and his Egyptian teammates continued their fairytale run at the 2026 FIFA World Cup in the United States. Competing in their fourth World Cup campaign, the North Africans have turned heads globally. After securing their first-ever tournament victory against New Zealand in the group stage, they have now marched convincingly into the pre-quarterfinals. This marks a massive turnaround from their 2018 campaign in Russia, where they lost all three group matches, and their failure to qualify for the 2022 edition in Qatar.
In contrast, Australia’s agonizing exit seals the end of Asian football’s presence at the tournament. Following Japan’s elimination by Brazil in the previous knockout stage, the Socceroos stood as the Asian Football Confederation’s (AFC) final hope. Other continental contenders, including South Korea, Qatar, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Jordan, and Uzbekistan, failed to clear the group stages.
Intense Drama in Dallas
The high-stakes clash at Dallas burst into life early on, with Australia’s Cristian Volpato initiating an attack in the fifth minute. However, it was Egypt that broke the deadlock in the 13th minute. Capitalizing on a perfectly lofted cross into the goal area by Karim Hafez from outside the box, Imam Ashour executed a clinical header to beat the Australian goalkeeper, putting Egypt ahead 1-0.
The Socceroos responded with relentless pressure. Aiden O’Neill missed the target from the left side of the penalty spot in the 15th minute, while Egypt’s Omar Marmoush saw his shot blocked by Harry Souttar moments later. Australia continued to chase an equalizer before halftime, but Egyptian goalkeeper Mostafa Shobeir made crucial saves to deny Aziz Behich in the 35th minute and claw away a dangerous header from Nestory Irankunda during first-half stoppage time. Despite creating six scoring opportunities and maintaining 45% possession, Australia trailed at the break.
Equalizer and Extra-Time Deadlock
Egypt resumed their attacking intent in the second half, with Marmoush narrowly missing a golden chance to double the lead in the 46th minute. Ten minutes later, Australia found their breakthrough via an unfortunate error. In the 55th minute, an inswinging free-kick from O’Neill caused chaos in the Egyptian box, leading defender Mohamed Hany to inadvertently head the ball into his own net while attempting to clear.
With the score leveled at 1-1, Australia assumed greater control of the second-half tempo, though explicit clear-cut chances remained rare. Egypt’s Ashour fired a long-range effort wide in the 73rd minute, and Australia’s Kay Tejan failed to convert from an Adin Hrustic corner in the 88th minute. A frantic five minutes of injury time saw Egypt launch multiple attacks from a Mohamed Salah corner, with Rami Rabia, Marwan Attia, and Haisham Hassan all denied by Australian goalkeeper Patrick Beach, forcing the match into extra time.
Australia, playing in only their third knockout stage in World Cup history, experienced extra time for the very first time. Socceroos management introduced fresh legs in midfield, replacing Connor Metcalfe and Aiden O’Neill with Awer Mabil and Paul Okon-Engstler. Salah missed the target early in extra time, while Attia’s long-range low drive in the 108th minute was comfortably gathered by Beach. Egypt pushed aggressively in the final minutes, but Australia’s defense held resolute, steering the match to a penalty shootout.
Clinical Shootout Secures History
Before the whistle blew for penalties, Australia substituted goalkeeper Patrick Beach for veteran custodian Mathew Ryan. However, the tactical move failed to destabilize the Egyptians.
Egypt executed their penalties flawlessly, with Mahmoud Saber, Rami Rabia, superstar captain Mohamed Salah, and Hossam Abdelmaguid all converting their spot-kicks with precision. Australia’s campaign crumbled as consecutive attempts from Harry Souttar and Lucas Herrington flew off-target. Though Jackson Irvine and Awer Mabil successfully found the back of the net, Egypt ran out 4-2 winners in the shootout.
Egypt now awaits the winner of the blockbuster knockout tie between Argentina and Cape Verde in the Round of 16.






